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Gilead: A Novel, by Marilynne Robinson (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 256 pp., $23)
PROSE worth rereading does not merely communicate: Lucidity with "elegant variations," as they used to be called, is not worth a second look, since you get the point. The best prose makes things happen. It uses pace, rhythm, length of phrase and sentence, pauses, vocabulary, imagery; it brings into being the experienced reality of a mental world.
In his New York Times review of Marilynne Robinson's novel Gilead, James Wood wrote that in her work, "silence is itself a quality, [and] the space around words may be full of noises." That should catch anyone's attention; it did ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Now, a masterpiece.(Gilead: A Novel)